The twelfth of never

The tune perhaps did. There's a folksong with the line, among others,
"I gave my love a chicken without any bone," a line that I remember
because of the double-entendre. However, I can't remember whether the
folksong contains the phrase, "twelfth of never."
OTOH, I could have it bass-ackwards, since I heard the pop song a
couple of years or more before I heard the folksong. I.e., the
supposed folksong could very well be based on the pop song and not the
other way around, for all that I know.
BTW, I appreciate your use of "dating colleagues" instead of the more
accurate, in my case, at least, "_dated_ colleagues." ;-)
-Wilson
On 9/21/06, Joanne M. Despres <jdespres at merriam-webster.com> wrote:
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> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster: "Joanne M. Despres" <jdespres at MERRIAM-WEBSTER.COM>
> Subject: The twelfth of never
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To my dating colleagues: would any of you happen to know
> whether the phrase "the twelfth of never" (a poeticism for "never")
> preceded the song recorded by Johnny Mathis in 1957?
>> Thanks,
>> Joanne
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